Pubdate: Thu, 23 Feb 2006
Source: Dover-Sherborn Press (Framingham, MA)
Copyright: 2006 Dover-Sherborn Press
Contact:  http://www2.townonline.com/dover/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/3586
Author: Rick Holmes,  MetroWest Daily News Columnist
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/pot.htm (Cannabis)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/decrim.htm (Decrim/Legalization)

40 YEARS OF REEFER MADNESS

Save us from politicians sending messages. They were at it  again 
last week, debating a bill that would provide civil fines, instead of 
criminal records, for those caught possessing small amounts of marijuana.

"That's the wrong  message to send to our kids," Attorney General Tom 
Reilly said. "We have to keep  them out of drugs."

State Rep. Karyn  Polito, R-Shrewsbury, agreed, saying the bill 
"sends the wrong message."

Let's get real:  Politicians don't send messages, especially to kids, 
who couldn't name their  state representative if their iPods depended on it.

For 40 years, politicians  have been "sending messages" to kids about 
the dangers of pot and for 40 years, the kids have been ignoring 
them. State legislators  and attorneys general don't send messages; 
they pass laws and prosecute people caught breaking them. The law 
they have now said they can send you to prison for  six months and 
fine you $500 for possession of a single joint - on top of 
your  lawyer's fees, of course. Another law makes anyone convicted of 
marijuana possession ineligible for federal college loans or  grants.

Nice message they are sending: Anyone who smokes pot shouldn't be 
able  to go to college.

Reilly is worried  about sending messages to kids, but the law he 
supports applies to adults as  well. A federal study released last 
year found that 12 percent of adults in the greater Boston area had 
smoked marijuana in the previous month.

Twelve percent  broke the law by choosing this relatively benign 
alternative to a cocktail. What message are  the politicians sending 
to millions of adults?

That they can't decide for  themselves which mild intoxicant to enjoy.

That their government believes they  must be treated like children - 
or criminals.

The adults aren't  listening to the politicians' message any more 
than the kids are. Some of them  have been laughing at "reefer 
madness" propaganda for 40 years, and the passage  of time hasn't 
made it any more convincing. In fact, the  aging of the baby boomers 
has given science its first opportunity to measure the  impact of 
long-term drug use.

In a recent review of the research, Time magazine  reported that, 
while cocaine and heroin are as dangerous as originally 
thought,  "the so-called demon weed turned out to be a lot less 
devilish than advertised."

The popular  image of the goofy, smoky slacker notwithstanding, a 
2003 study in the Journal  of the International Neuropsychological 
Society found that "even among regular users, there is no proof that 
pot causes irreversible cognitive damage," Time  writes.  Long-term 
use can  affect memory, but those effects fade if the user stops.

Marijuana can be  addictive for some, said psychologist Peter Provet, 
president of Odyssey House.  "But a lot of people who use pot don't 
become addicts."

Forty years doesn't seem to have changed the politics of drug laws. 
State legislators all  seem to have this Nixon-era belief that if 
they support any marijuana reform  bill the voters will decide they 
are hippies and the narcs will search their  sock drawers. But the 
voters are way ahead of them.

Over the last five years, voters in 26 Massachusetts  districts, 
including those represented by Sen. Richard Moore, D-Uxbridge, 
Rep.  Debby Blumer, D-Framingham, and Rep. Jim Vallee, D-Franklin, 
have been asked in  ballot questions whether they support a reform 
bill similar to the one now  before the Legislature. In every case, 
voters supported the reforms by a healthy  margin.

Moore, Blumer and  Vallee all promptly said they would ignore the 
wishes of the voters in their  districts.

Something about sending a message, if I recall. Vallee, who was then 
chairman of the criminal justice committee, said it probably didn't 
have the  votes to pass, so he wouldn't allow his committee to 
consider it. But something has  changed.

Vallee's criminal justice committee was eliminated and a new 
committee  on mental health and substance abuse was created.

The new committee is concerned  with getting effective treatment to 
people who are addicted and ill. It  approaches substance abuse as an 
issue of public health, not public morality.  It's more interested in 
helping people than in sending messages by locking them  up. That 
committee  last week endorsed the decriminalization bill, but given 
the wimpishness of the  other legislators, it may go no further.

Asked about the bill, Rep. David  Linsky, D-Natick, declined to take 
a position. "I'm not sure the bill will get  to the floor," he said hopefully.

Even this bill,  which would change the penalty for possession of 
less than an ounce of marijuana  to a $250 fine, is a weak compromise 
with common sense. The common-sense  approach would recognize that, 
by almost any measure, marijuana is no worse than beer. And the 
legitimate concerns about pot - purity, potency and abuse 
by  children - could most easily be addressed by treating it exactly 
like beer. Kids have told me  it's easier to get hold of pot than alcohol.

There's a reason for that: Alcohol  is sold by liquor store owners 
who face heavy fines and lost business if they  are caught selling to 
anyone under 21. There's also a  reason why the jump to hard drugs is 
easier for pot-smokers than drinkers: The  man at the liquor store 
might want to talk you into a finer wine or fancier  brew, but he 
doesn't stock cocaine or crystal meth. Why not let him put some 
regulated, taxed marijuana in his humidor along with the cigars? But 
common sense  and sound public policy go out the window when 
politicians fall under the sway  of reefer madness.

They are too busy sending messages no one is listening to 
and  locking up otherwise responsible citizens.
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MAP posted-by: Beth Wehrman